Java is too large for including in Puppy but the RTE (run time) is provided on Lucid Puppy Quickpet - so Java programs can be run

Anyway Good luck - let us know how you get on

So far eclipse seems to work best with puppy, but I'll keep looking for better solutions, and if I find any I'll let the community know.

Eclipse is written in Java, so if Java is correctly installed, Eclipse ought to run.

I multi-boot Puppy and Ubuntu, Each is installed on an ext4 partition, and each mounts the other's partition at boot. Puppy sees the Ubuntu slice as /ubuntu, and Ubuntu sees the Puppy slice as /media/puppy.

Because they can see each other's partitions, I've been experimenting with sharing large apps between them, to save space and make updates easier.

Eclipse actually lives on the Puppy side in /opt/eclipse, but is usable from Ubuntu.

Eclipse seems to have become the default standard IDE for developers working in Java and most other things, so it's probably the best bet if it does work for you.
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Dennis

Java is too large for including in Puppy but the RTE (run time) is provided on Lucid Puppy Quickpet - so Java programs can be run

Anyway Good luck - let us know how you get on

So far eclipse seems to work best with puppy, but I'll keep looking for better solutions, and if I find any I'll let the community know.

Eclipse is written in Java, so if Java is correctly installed, Eclipse ought to run.

I multi-boot Puppy and Ubuntu, Each is installed on an ext4 partition, and each mounts the other's partition at boot. Puppy sees the Ubuntu slice as /ubuntu, and Ubuntu sees the Puppy slice as /media/puppy.

Because they can see each other's partitions, I've been experimenting with sharing large apps between them, to save space and make updates easier.

Eclipse actually lives on the Puppy side in /opt/eclipse, but is usable from Ubuntu.

Eclipse seems to have become the default standard IDE for developers working in Java and most other things, so it's probably the best bet if it does work for you.
______
Dennis

I have experimented with multiple distros in the past, and it is definitely amazing how much more you can do! but ubuntu's a little too big for my liking, but the ease of use is great.

Yes it seems that everyone uses eclipse these days, I like all the Java IDEs (netbeans is my favorite) but so far Eclipse is the only Java IDE that will work flawlessly on puppy 4.3.1.

I multi-boot Puppy and Ubuntu, Each is installed on an ext4 partition, and each mounts the other's partition at boot. Puppy sees the Ubuntu slice as /ubuntu, and Ubuntu sees the Puppy slice as /media/puppy.

Because they can see each other's partitions, I've been experimenting with sharing large apps between them, to save space and make updates easier.

Eclipse actually lives on the Puppy side in /opt/eclipse, but is usable from Ubuntu.

I have experimented with multiple distros in the past, and it is definitely amazing how much more you can do! but ubuntu's a little too big for my liking, but the ease of use is great.

It's not that big here.

I originally installed Ubuntu from the Xubuntu distribution. It installed without a hitch and ran, but was painfully slow. Posters in the Ubuntu forums thought too much Gnome had crept in, Xubuntu was no longer a light weight distro, and that Ubuntu had a steadily advancing idea of what "low end" was. They suggested reinstalling from the MinimalCD.

Puppy had released 4.31, and I wanted to go to an ext4 file system, so I wiped both partitions, reformatted as ext4, and reinstalled from scratch.

The Ubuntu MinimalCD distro is all of 10MB. Installing from it produced a barebones command line Linux installation that was connected to my network. From there I could use apt-get to grab Xfce4 as window manager, and selecting Xfce4 automatically brought along Xorg and the rest of X-Windows necessary to run it, so I could boot to a GUI and things Just Worked.

Once Xfce4 was in place, I could install Synaptics to get the GUI package manager and install the other stuff I wanted.

The result isn't as sprightly as Puppy, but is usable. Since each sees the other's partition, sharing apps between them was a logical next step.

Quote:

Quote:

Eclipse seems to have become the default standard IDE for developers working in Java and most other things, so it's probably the best bet if it does work for you.

Yes it seems that everyone uses eclipse these days, I like all the Java IDEs (netbeans is my favorite) but so far Eclipse is the only Java IDE that will work flawlessly on puppy 4.3.1.

I know other folks that like Netbeans.

But I think Eclipse pretty well savaged the market for commercial IDEs. Borland used to offer C++ Builder and -J-Builder, but spun the tools operation off as Codegear, which was later acquired by Embarcadero Technologies. Why buy an IDE when you can get Eclipse? And with the appropriate plugins, you can use Eclipse to code and build in pretty much any language.

I think the only commercial IDE of any real significance now is probably MS Visual Studio, but that pretty much assumes you are developing in C++/C# for Windoze.
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Dennis

Did I have Codegear running in Puppy? I seem to remember it was there . . . briefly . . .
Mark (MU) did a Java course (Hi Mark) and I seem to remember had a version of Muppy Puppy set up for javing (program raving?)

How are things Mark?
Is your apartment still on blue light?

Java Puppy . . . m m m . . . it might be a bit bigger but there must be android apps, Java all sorts and mobile phone apps that would create a very unique Puppy . . ._________________YinYana AI Buddhism

Did I have Codegear running in Puppy? I seem to remember it was there . . . briefly . . .

I think you mean Code:Blocks, and there's a PET of v8.02 of that floating around.

Quote:

Java Puppy . . . m m m . . . it might be a bit bigger but there must be android apps, Java all sorts and mobile phone apps that would create a very unique Puppy . . .

Just because they're written in Java, doesn't mean they're portable. Portable encompasses more than "runs on architectures X, Y, and Z".

The Nokia Internet Tablet runs a flavor of Linux and uses a framework called Maemo. An assortment of Linux apps exist for the Tablet, but more that might be desirable don't, because they were written for systems with big screens, mice, and full keyboards. Redoing them to display effectively on a handheld and use a touch screen is a non-trivial process.

It's why I don't see Puppy as a useful starting point for a handheld Linux port. The form factor and UI are too different. The Linux kernel and Busybox can be migrated, but most of what makes Puppy Puppy is likely to be lost in translation.

The reverse problem applies to trying to bring something like an Android app up on a Puppy box. It's written for a handheld with a small display and a touch screen. It will require major reworking for other platforms, even if it does something that might be useful in a Puppy installation.
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Dennis

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